BIDA has:
"Photography: We don't have a photography policy, and it is common for
dancers to take pictures and post them on social media." --
https://www.bidadance.org/accessibility
We talked a lot about ways in which we could potentially make the
dance better for people who don't want to be photographed or have
their pictures shared, but we ended up running into the same problems
Alan describes.
If you have a place where people can trust that photos of them will
not appear on social media without them having the option to opt out,
then there are people who can come to your dance who couldn't
otherwise. On the other hand, if you make some effort in this
direction but it still happens, which is what will happen unless you
have quite strict enforcement (especially with newcomers), you aren't
successfully making the dance more accessible and you are making the
dance less enjoyable for dancers who like sharing photos.
Jeff
On Wed, Mar 17, 2021 at 10:19 PM Winston, Alan P. via Organizers
<organizers@lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
>
> BACDS started trying to address this 10 or so years ago when we wanted to put dance images in our publicity and privacy concerns meant that we couldn't just use pictures. It was very frustrating that while the Board was arguing about this stuff pictures of our dances from random dancers were turning up on FB with no concern for privacy. We eventually concluded that if we were going to take publicity photos we'd let people know beforehand, announce what dance in the evening we were going to do it in, and let people sit down or leave the room for that one dance.
>
> That's okay when you're in charge of the photographer.
>
> It turns out to be effectively impossible to really prevent photography without draconian measures like searches at the door and confiscating all the cellphones.
>
> The people who don't want to be photographed range from people who just have a preference to people for whom it's a matter of survival - those who have fled violent abusers or who are, say, in witness protection. You cannot guarantee their safety and they need to understand that you can do at most a best-effort attempt.
>
> Given that, it's useful to designate one line as photos okay and have signage at the desk about not photographing outside of that line, but people will still miss or forget the signage, so organizers have to keep an eye on it and announcements have to be made, which may on any given night be for the benefit of people who aren't there.
>
> I don't think we've tried giving people "no photos please" badges. That might be effective in that people reviewing images before sharing them will see a reminder in the picture, but it's not likely to be useful for people who livestream a minute of your dance.
>
> -- Alan
>
> ________________________________
> From: Karey Bacon via Organizers <organizers@lists.sharedweight.net>
> Sent: Wednesday, March 17, 2021 6:16 PM
> To: organizers@lists.sharedweight.net <organizers@lists.sharedweight.net>
> Subject: [Organizers] photography policy?
>
> Hi all,
> We in Philadelphia are using our Covid time to try to get some policies done.
>
> One thing that has come up is a photography/video policy. Some dancers do not want to appear in any photos or videos.
>
> Some ideas we tossed about that have practical drawbacks:
> -designate one line as always non-photo/video
> -buttons or badges for those who do not want to be on camera
>
> Is this something your dance has grappled with? Anything you've come up with that you're willing to share?
>
> Thanks in advance,
>
> Karey Bacon
> she/her/hers
> 267-437-5641
>
>
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